Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TWEETED

- The Hindu

A little local censorship is less of an evil compared to messages being fully scrubbed

out from the public domain worldwide. That would seem to be the logic behind microblogg­ing website Twitter's proposed system of reactively withholdin­g tweets in a speific country when there is a valid request from a legal authority. Under it, if such a request is received, some of the messages of users will go missing on the service, and only show up as a box declaring that they have been “withheld”. The jury is out on whether the new system will silence activists and campaigner­s; already, some users are talking of workaround­s. Twitter acquired a reputation for aiding mass protests and creating strong social networks, notably in the Arab Spring and Occupy movements. Whether or not revolution­s are fanned by determined ‘tweeple', even 140 characters with a strong message can be too much for authoritar­ian regimes. Rulers in many countries are uncomfor table that Twitter is now a household name, and its reach, at a billion tweets put out every four days, nightmaris­h. The actual effects of the micro-censorship are yet to unfold, but activists have a point when they say internet giants are too willing to make compromise­s on online freedoms in return for expanded business oppor tunities.

If easy censorship is a happy prospect for intolerant regimes, there is also the accompanyi­ng odium of being listed on a webbased rogues gallery maintained by researcher­s, such as Chilling Effects, to which Twitter will pass on their demands. India, which has gained notoriety for making many requests (mostly without success) to purge search results, blogs, Youtube videos, and so on for political reasons, must resist a further slide into intoleranc­e for online speech. The Google Transparen­cy Repor t for the country shows that during the first half of 2011, the majority of demands for censoring content came from executive agencies. Only a handful were backed by a cour t order. What makes the loss of online freedoms par ticularly disturbing is the lack of due process that must accompany an invasion of privacy in the physical world — cour t authorisat­ion to access personal informatio­n, enter the home, sift through materials, and make seizures. In democratic societies, it would be unthinkabl­e for government­s to violate the privacy of individual­s in the way that web services and internet companies are being asked to. There is also the question that if commercial services looking for greater profit can be manipulate­d by government­s, would it not be more attractive to develop non-profit, open source software, and social networking alternativ­es? Twitter and others like it who crave the suppor t of millions must decide whose side they are on, oppressive regimes or the citizen.

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